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Chicago examiner tuesday Chicago march 21 1911 20 pages vol ix no 77 a m tuesday u h patent offlca rkjle one cent 01 ' 1 """ w carn ' 3 Â« cent aer month hfc'jawhg Chicago ano vicinity fair to gjg < day unsettled wednesday con a[sp j . tinued warm moderate winds f m i mostly southerly tlie temperature jesterday jir higbebt li'j /< v lowest Â« y average 5c telegram clew to beating of washington . i negro educator said to havej been summoned to house i where he was attacked flirting charge deniedj he staggered says police man who caught victim of white woman's husband sew york march 20 it remains for the adjourned hearing in west side court to-morrow to learn about the telegram which sent booker t washington fore most negro of america to an apartment bouse in west sixty-third street where being black and accused of saying hello sweetheart to a while woman he was so seriously beaten by her husband and the neighbors that he could not answer many questions to-day to night a conference between mr wash ington's lawyer wilfred smith and james 1 moore attorney for albert ulrich ac cused of felonious assault and held in bail till released by bail this afternoon came to nothing the case will go on to-morrow said attorney . moore what mr smith said 1 cannot sny of course i simply said to mr smith here's a man toppling off his pedestal and it's too bad mr moore said that mrs tjlrich told him she noticed the ucgro standing in the hall way when she veut out with one of her clogs 7he was still there when she re turned and he followed her when she came out with the other dog and greeted her with hello sweetheart husband attacks washington she immediately told her husband what had happened and he rushed out olrich saw the negro in the hallway j said mr moore he brushed past the negro and went across the street into the shadows where he vatehed and saw the man come out and go back into the hall way then ulrich went after him and asked him what do you want here the negro replied none of your business and punched ulrich when ulrich grappled with him the negro an out into the street and ulrich after him toliceman tierney who made the arrest was quoted as saying that he smelled liquor when taking them to the station and ulrich had charged that washington fell three or four times because unsteady ou bis feet ulrich seemed all right was all the l>olicemao would say to-night lawrence abbott son of dr lyman abbott was cne of those lvho called upon mr wash ington at the manhattan hotel abbott calls on washington now is the time for you white friends to show what they are worth he said to the battered man sticking plasters were ncross his forehead a big piece of cotton was affixed to the back of bits head and he looked badly used up it's too bad said mr abbott that roosevelt is iu arizona on oming down mr abbott was asked if he i'ould persuade the injured president of t'jskcgee to yield up the sought-for tel egram mr washington he answered is iu no condition to see any one and i know nothing about the telegram seth low,_president of the board of trus tees of the tuskegee institute for negroes in alabama which mr washington built vp from one shanty one teacher and thirty students to 100 teachers 1,000 students and a plant valued at almost 1,000,000 called and presently issued this declaration of continuation : the trustees of tuskegee institute have ahsolute confidence in dr washington and they 14 ill give to him whatever support and aid be needs , tax bachelors pay for twins bill's aim mothers bonus â€” 100 for singles 300 for triplets â€” and 10 man tax asked springfield 111 march 20 the in crease population fund is given a till la i the state treasury air for itself in a bill which senator beall ibe stork mayor of auon and arch foe of 4vonian auftrasre ! intends to introduce to-morrow and the task of keeping the till filled will lie ae*l corded to the bachelors of the state in a ; ompauiou biil providing a sly annual for feit io lie wrung from every man over the age of tbirty-flve who caunot satisfactorily explain why he is unmarried the first bill establishes a bonus sys tem for mothers who will benefit ou a graduated scale as follows . singles 100 twins shoo triplets shoo beall is proud of a voluminous preamble which recites if present conditions are allowed to continue it can be shown with mathemati cal certainly that the families ot the prcs ent upper classes with their share of the good qualities of our race will simply cease to exist if the nation is to endure an average of four children should bless each household worst gossip is man mrs frederick nathan of new york so replies to prof e h griggs new york march 20 1t is still true that three-fourths of the gossip of the world is peddled by women when professor edward howard griggs launched the statement quoted above in his recent address to the equal franchise society here he called forth a feminine choru of protest mrs frederick nathan president of the consumers league said to-day i am sick and tired of hearing women made the universal scapegoat in women's clubs music literature or problems of j civic interest are the invariable topics men apparently go to their clubs to talk about the absent or about those who run the gautlet of the smoking room widows the worst gossip i personally happen to know is a man balks dyrenforth will i widow agrees to division freeing Chicago boy from restrictions washington march 20 mrs jennie dyrenforth widow of general rohert dy renforth to-day filed an answer to the suit of attorney w 11 dennis collector of the estate in which she assents to an amicable settlement of the diapute among the heirs and a distribution of the est it avoiding probate of the will the ultimate effect of mrs dyrenforth's action iwll be an acknowledgment of ina bility to observe the peculiar conditions un der which general dvreniorth made bi grandson robert st george dyrenforth of Chicago one of his hairs these conditions provided that the boy should avoid the so ciety of women should never become a catholic adn should graduate from yale and oxford before attaining bis major ty 1,500 for peep at king j english nobility offers houses as coronation net for u s dollars new york march 20 â€” members of the engllÃŸh nobility in their quest of ameri can dollars are placing their london houses in the hands of real estate agents to be let to americans visiting london for coronation fortnight esorbltnat prices are asked in jiew york . advertisements lady augusta fane offers her town house 33 tedworth square s w described as pleasantly situated in open square with access to private gardens and within easy distance of the parks and all centers of interest for 1,800 for june or less if only for coronation fortnight if ledy fane's house is not acceptable then the agent in whose hands it has been placed is in a position to submit a long list of very desirable locations i edna loftus for divorce ready to seek decree rheinstrom in sanitarium cincinnati 0 march 20 relatives of harry rheinstrom who 1 married miss edna loftus an english actress last fall stated this afternoon that she will seek a divorce and that they are glad of her de cision they declare if she is successful he will soon regain his lost mentality rheinstrom's mother brought court pro ceedings to declare him of unsound mind but he offered fight won out and married miss loftus a few months ago he created several scenes by showing that he was of unsound mind and has since been in a sanitarium . his wife has a large allowance from his family which is one of the wealthiest in cincinnati yerkes bill is protested widow of magnate denies justice of tiffany's claim new york march 20 mary adelaide yerkes widow of the former Chicago trac tion magnate to-day submitted to the sur rogate a controversy with louis s owsley ancillary executor of the estate of charles t yerkes to recover 7,362 this elaim is for jewelry purchased from tiffany % co in 1904 mrs yerkes says that her husband ordered the gems and that his estate should pay for them mr owsley doubts the justice of i the claim free wool cut in cotton plan of democrats decision . reached on pro gramme for first month of extra session to rush direct vote bill statehood m-jasure also fa voied despite objections of senator bailey washington march 20-^raw wool the basic material or warm clothing is to be admitted into this country practically free ot duty under the democratic down ward revision of llie lariff manufactures in whole or in part of tvool arc fo be admitted with a duty measured only by the difference in cost of labor at home and abroad a revised cotton schedule with horizon tal reductions on all items is also to be turned loose by the ways and means com mittee â€¢ statehood and popular election of sen ators onclude the democratic plan for the first month of the session j this is the gejatatou that h&fr been re ported by the democratic members of the ways and means committee the wool schedule is to be drawn under the super vision and personal direction of chairman underwood of the committee and by a sub committee of which he is the head canadian pact unchanged the new schedule is to be launched in the house before the end of april to it will he attached the canadian reciprocity treaty tariff arrangement desired by pres ident Taft the supreme court decided in the corporation tax law that such a rider to a tariff measure was legal the cana dian pact will not be changed the re vised wool schedule can pass the house the democraic leaders believe it will pass the senate because of the presi dent's interest in the canadian agreement and his assertion that the wool schedule of the payne-aldrich law was indefensible the present duty on wool of the first class is 11 cents per pound if unwashed 22 cents per pound if washed 33 cents per pound if scoured the duty on second class wood is 12 cents per pound 36 cents per pound if scoured the duty on wool of the third class valued at less than 12 cents per pound snail be 4 cents per pound worth more than 12 cents per pound 7 cents per pound virtually free trade within these three classes are covered the raw wool imported under certain conditions as to treatment of the raw wools the duty increases under the underwood schedules the duties to be levied on these wools in their raw state will not exceed 2 to 4 cents per pound which is held to be free trade practically by the wool men mr underwood might make the wool free if it were not that he is opposed to a large free list for raw materials he favors a tariff for revenue only and the levying of small duties on most imports after the wool schedule has been launched in the house the revised cotton schedule will be pushed along the house leaders have no fears of objections to the passage of such a measure through the house the trouble will come in the sen ate to reduce cost of living this is the answer of the house leaders to president Taft who is advising against tariff revision until there can be a report from the tariff lioard on matters now un der investigation it is announced the board will not he ready to make a report at the special session of congress the president has indicated a purpose to recommend in his special message to con gress authorization of a tariff commission to take over all matters pertaining to a tariff rpvislou the democrats will not wait for a report from a tariff lioard with recommendations before undertaking their tariff revision they may not accede to the request of the president for a permanent tariff commis sion railnre of the existing tariff board to make a report will be urged as an argu ment against additional authorizations and may prevpnt future appropriations to con tinue the work it is also the answer tof the democrats to the demands of the people of the country for reductions in the price of the necessi ti ofl 1 life at plans of democrats on wool and cotton tariff 5 raw wool will be admitted p rac ) |\ tically free of duly < ( manufactures in whole or in \ ) part of wool will be admitted with j ) duty measured only by difference > ) in the cost of labor at home and ) \ abroad s < cotton schedule to be revised ) ) with horizontal reductions on all ) ) items i if merriam became mayor or the high-brow fire department woman's wit traps black hand suspect husband's employe arrested after taking marked bills . and writing letter â– â– aided by mrs anna williams 2681 or chard street wife of prank wiuiams a florist detectives biddinger morgan spain and mclaughlin of the central sta tion last night arrested ralph m palmer on suspicion of having robbed his employer of several hundred dollars during the past year she also suspects him of having written a black hand letter to her march 7 in which 400 was demanded failure to pay heed to letter the writer said would result in the death of williams and his wife when mrs williams received the letter she laughed and began formulating plans by which she might capture the writer palmer asked williams to allow hjm to get off last thursday night and as this was the time when mrs williams was told in the letter to place 400 wrapped in a black rag near the corner of a fence surrounding a little house in lincoln park mrs williams suspected him she took the letter to captain wood and de tectives who were assigned to the case in structed her to wrap the money in the rag and leave it at the place designated just what the detective learned while watching this point they refuse to tell but since that time they have been watch ing palmer last night detective sergeant biddinger went into the store and purchased 5 worth of flowers of palmer who was alone in the place giving him five 1 bills which were marked later when mrs williams went to the store to get the day's receipts palmer turned over only one of these marked bills the detectives then walked iu and arrested him when searched the other four marked bills were in his posses sion the police say they then questioned him but he re fused to talk yesterday mrs williams had palmer write a letter to a customer and used many words which were in the black hand letter this will be compared with the writing in the black hand letter school board head eack dp james b mcfntrich president of the i boaih of education has returned from an eitended trip in the west indies he was in his office yesterday and announced that tie was ready to take up liif official t - emmmm m he plays piano 30 hours south bethlehem pa march 20 all worlds records for long distance con tinuous piauo playing were shattered here to-day by lewis thorpe secretary of c m schwab's bethlehem steel companv i band who played rag-time and classical i selections for tbirtr hours an fifteen mini republican claflfl hiccoughs kill man of 86 st pall minn march 20.â€”william curric eighty-six 32 ash street minneapo lis died of exhaustion caused by hic coughs late to-day currie had been una l^fajj^^iccougblng for ten days to enable him to sleep his continued w m mrs schenk in collapse when held as slayer of husband wife who shot after j ' reveiry incoherently tells of the killing coroner's in quest calls her responsible finding of bullets and testi mony that two shots were fired show . discrepancies in story told by woman mrs theresa schenk who shot and killed her busliand charles schenk nwahlger os the northwestern gas light t coke cotii pany of park itidge early saturcl.i ,- idocb lug following a ui^ht of revelry in their home in that village was yesterday bound over to the grand jury as responsible for his death the verdict came after an sight hours session spent in examining witnesses it was nearly two horns later when the secret deliberations had beeu concluded the verdict came as the climax of a dag of startling clevelonui is a up to a certain point evgrthing hr^fl coroner's verdict in schenk case ( charles schenk now lying dead i > at his home in the said city of ) | park ridge county of cook state } i of Illinois came to his death from \ < shock and hemorrhage due to the ) ) result of a bullet wound of the j i abdomen from the evidence of \ < fered the jury we are of the ; j opinion that said bullet was fired i > from a revolver held in the hands \ i of the wife of the deceased the { ( jury therefore recommends that ) ' the said theresa schenk be held s Â£ to the grand jury until discharged s 5 by due process of law \ signed by > f r pfeifer albert x.buchheit > ) george n fulleredward b farnum > | fred c stagg a w cochran 5 s peter hoffman coroner \ examiner want ad columns untal somebody advertises for such article s s?3k *?* asthma and bronchial sufferers ***** r . i bronchial troche safe iml"zl^l^la v rxs you can get good bright round dollars out of the examiner want ad pages â€” in hundreds of ways from securing a bargain in real estate a business oppor tunity a good position or a good supply of help for the office or home read the examiner want ads and get the gold out of your newspaper Chicago examiner want ad pages read for profit â€” use for results fx r . j you can phono your ad to i ] the examiner â€” call main i-i 5000 and ask for an ad taker

Chicago examiner tuesday Chicago march 21 1911 20 pages vol ix no 77 a m tuesday u h patent offlca rkjle one cent 01 ' 1 """ w carn ' 3 Â« cent aer month hfc'jawhg Chicago ano vicinity fair to gjg < day unsettled wednesday con a[sp j . tinued warm moderate winds f m i mostly southerly tlie temperature jesterday jir higbebt li'j /< v lowest Â« y average 5c telegram clew to beating of washington . i negro educator said to havej been summoned to house i where he was attacked flirting charge deniedj he staggered says police man who caught victim of white woman's husband sew york march 20 it remains for the adjourned hearing in west side court to-morrow to learn about the telegram which sent booker t washington fore most negro of america to an apartment bouse in west sixty-third street where being black and accused of saying hello sweetheart to a while woman he was so seriously beaten by her husband and the neighbors that he could not answer many questions to-day to night a conference between mr wash ington's lawyer wilfred smith and james 1 moore attorney for albert ulrich ac cused of felonious assault and held in bail till released by bail this afternoon came to nothing the case will go on to-morrow said attorney . moore what mr smith said 1 cannot sny of course i simply said to mr smith here's a man toppling off his pedestal and it's too bad mr moore said that mrs tjlrich told him she noticed the ucgro standing in the hall way when she veut out with one of her clogs 7he was still there when she re turned and he followed her when she came out with the other dog and greeted her with hello sweetheart husband attacks washington she immediately told her husband what had happened and he rushed out olrich saw the negro in the hallway j said mr moore he brushed past the negro and went across the street into the shadows where he vatehed and saw the man come out and go back into the hall way then ulrich went after him and asked him what do you want here the negro replied none of your business and punched ulrich when ulrich grappled with him the negro an out into the street and ulrich after him toliceman tierney who made the arrest was quoted as saying that he smelled liquor when taking them to the station and ulrich had charged that washington fell three or four times because unsteady ou bis feet ulrich seemed all right was all the l>olicemao would say to-night lawrence abbott son of dr lyman abbott was cne of those lvho called upon mr wash ington at the manhattan hotel abbott calls on washington now is the time for you white friends to show what they are worth he said to the battered man sticking plasters were ncross his forehead a big piece of cotton was affixed to the back of bits head and he looked badly used up it's too bad said mr abbott that roosevelt is iu arizona on oming down mr abbott was asked if he i'ould persuade the injured president of t'jskcgee to yield up the sought-for tel egram mr washington he answered is iu no condition to see any one and i know nothing about the telegram seth low,_president of the board of trus tees of the tuskegee institute for negroes in alabama which mr washington built vp from one shanty one teacher and thirty students to 100 teachers 1,000 students and a plant valued at almost 1,000,000 called and presently issued this declaration of continuation : the trustees of tuskegee institute have ahsolute confidence in dr washington and they 14 ill give to him whatever support and aid be needs , tax bachelors pay for twins bill's aim mothers bonus â€” 100 for singles 300 for triplets â€” and 10 man tax asked springfield 111 march 20 the in crease population fund is given a till la i the state treasury air for itself in a bill which senator beall ibe stork mayor of auon and arch foe of 4vonian auftrasre ! intends to introduce to-morrow and the task of keeping the till filled will lie ae*l corded to the bachelors of the state in a ; ompauiou biil providing a sly annual for feit io lie wrung from every man over the age of tbirty-flve who caunot satisfactorily explain why he is unmarried the first bill establishes a bonus sys tem for mothers who will benefit ou a graduated scale as follows . singles 100 twins shoo triplets shoo beall is proud of a voluminous preamble which recites if present conditions are allowed to continue it can be shown with mathemati cal certainly that the families ot the prcs ent upper classes with their share of the good qualities of our race will simply cease to exist if the nation is to endure an average of four children should bless each household worst gossip is man mrs frederick nathan of new york so replies to prof e h griggs new york march 20 1t is still true that three-fourths of the gossip of the world is peddled by women when professor edward howard griggs launched the statement quoted above in his recent address to the equal franchise society here he called forth a feminine choru of protest mrs frederick nathan president of the consumers league said to-day i am sick and tired of hearing women made the universal scapegoat in women's clubs music literature or problems of j civic interest are the invariable topics men apparently go to their clubs to talk about the absent or about those who run the gautlet of the smoking room widows the worst gossip i personally happen to know is a man balks dyrenforth will i widow agrees to division freeing Chicago boy from restrictions washington march 20 mrs jennie dyrenforth widow of general rohert dy renforth to-day filed an answer to the suit of attorney w 11 dennis collector of the estate in which she assents to an amicable settlement of the diapute among the heirs and a distribution of the est it avoiding probate of the will the ultimate effect of mrs dyrenforth's action iwll be an acknowledgment of ina bility to observe the peculiar conditions un der which general dvreniorth made bi grandson robert st george dyrenforth of Chicago one of his hairs these conditions provided that the boy should avoid the so ciety of women should never become a catholic adn should graduate from yale and oxford before attaining bis major ty 1,500 for peep at king j english nobility offers houses as coronation net for u s dollars new york march 20 â€” members of the engllÃŸh nobility in their quest of ameri can dollars are placing their london houses in the hands of real estate agents to be let to americans visiting london for coronation fortnight esorbltnat prices are asked in jiew york . advertisements lady augusta fane offers her town house 33 tedworth square s w described as pleasantly situated in open square with access to private gardens and within easy distance of the parks and all centers of interest for 1,800 for june or less if only for coronation fortnight if ledy fane's house is not acceptable then the agent in whose hands it has been placed is in a position to submit a long list of very desirable locations i edna loftus for divorce ready to seek decree rheinstrom in sanitarium cincinnati 0 march 20 relatives of harry rheinstrom who 1 married miss edna loftus an english actress last fall stated this afternoon that she will seek a divorce and that they are glad of her de cision they declare if she is successful he will soon regain his lost mentality rheinstrom's mother brought court pro ceedings to declare him of unsound mind but he offered fight won out and married miss loftus a few months ago he created several scenes by showing that he was of unsound mind and has since been in a sanitarium . his wife has a large allowance from his family which is one of the wealthiest in cincinnati yerkes bill is protested widow of magnate denies justice of tiffany's claim new york march 20 mary adelaide yerkes widow of the former Chicago trac tion magnate to-day submitted to the sur rogate a controversy with louis s owsley ancillary executor of the estate of charles t yerkes to recover 7,362 this elaim is for jewelry purchased from tiffany % co in 1904 mrs yerkes says that her husband ordered the gems and that his estate should pay for them mr owsley doubts the justice of i the claim free wool cut in cotton plan of democrats decision . reached on pro gramme for first month of extra session to rush direct vote bill statehood m-jasure also fa voied despite objections of senator bailey washington march 20-^raw wool the basic material or warm clothing is to be admitted into this country practically free ot duty under the democratic down ward revision of llie lariff manufactures in whole or in part of tvool arc fo be admitted with a duty measured only by the difference in cost of labor at home and abroad a revised cotton schedule with horizon tal reductions on all items is also to be turned loose by the ways and means com mittee â€¢ statehood and popular election of sen ators onclude the democratic plan for the first month of the session j this is the gejatatou that h&fr been re ported by the democratic members of the ways and means committee the wool schedule is to be drawn under the super vision and personal direction of chairman underwood of the committee and by a sub committee of which he is the head canadian pact unchanged the new schedule is to be launched in the house before the end of april to it will he attached the canadian reciprocity treaty tariff arrangement desired by pres ident Taft the supreme court decided in the corporation tax law that such a rider to a tariff measure was legal the cana dian pact will not be changed the re vised wool schedule can pass the house the democraic leaders believe it will pass the senate because of the presi dent's interest in the canadian agreement and his assertion that the wool schedule of the payne-aldrich law was indefensible the present duty on wool of the first class is 11 cents per pound if unwashed 22 cents per pound if washed 33 cents per pound if scoured the duty on second class wood is 12 cents per pound 36 cents per pound if scoured the duty on wool of the third class valued at less than 12 cents per pound snail be 4 cents per pound worth more than 12 cents per pound 7 cents per pound virtually free trade within these three classes are covered the raw wool imported under certain conditions as to treatment of the raw wools the duty increases under the underwood schedules the duties to be levied on these wools in their raw state will not exceed 2 to 4 cents per pound which is held to be free trade practically by the wool men mr underwood might make the wool free if it were not that he is opposed to a large free list for raw materials he favors a tariff for revenue only and the levying of small duties on most imports after the wool schedule has been launched in the house the revised cotton schedule will be pushed along the house leaders have no fears of objections to the passage of such a measure through the house the trouble will come in the sen ate to reduce cost of living this is the answer of the house leaders to president Taft who is advising against tariff revision until there can be a report from the tariff lioard on matters now un der investigation it is announced the board will not he ready to make a report at the special session of congress the president has indicated a purpose to recommend in his special message to con gress authorization of a tariff commission to take over all matters pertaining to a tariff rpvislou the democrats will not wait for a report from a tariff lioard with recommendations before undertaking their tariff revision they may not accede to the request of the president for a permanent tariff commis sion railnre of the existing tariff board to make a report will be urged as an argu ment against additional authorizations and may prevpnt future appropriations to con tinue the work it is also the answer tof the democrats to the demands of the people of the country for reductions in the price of the necessi ti ofl 1 life at plans of democrats on wool and cotton tariff 5 raw wool will be admitted p rac ) |\ tically free of duly < ( manufactures in whole or in \ ) part of wool will be admitted with j ) duty measured only by difference > ) in the cost of labor at home and ) \ abroad s < cotton schedule to be revised ) ) with horizontal reductions on all ) ) items i if merriam became mayor or the high-brow fire department woman's wit traps black hand suspect husband's employe arrested after taking marked bills . and writing letter â– â– aided by mrs anna williams 2681 or chard street wife of prank wiuiams a florist detectives biddinger morgan spain and mclaughlin of the central sta tion last night arrested ralph m palmer on suspicion of having robbed his employer of several hundred dollars during the past year she also suspects him of having written a black hand letter to her march 7 in which 400 was demanded failure to pay heed to letter the writer said would result in the death of williams and his wife when mrs williams received the letter she laughed and began formulating plans by which she might capture the writer palmer asked williams to allow hjm to get off last thursday night and as this was the time when mrs williams was told in the letter to place 400 wrapped in a black rag near the corner of a fence surrounding a little house in lincoln park mrs williams suspected him she took the letter to captain wood and de tectives who were assigned to the case in structed her to wrap the money in the rag and leave it at the place designated just what the detective learned while watching this point they refuse to tell but since that time they have been watch ing palmer last night detective sergeant biddinger went into the store and purchased 5 worth of flowers of palmer who was alone in the place giving him five 1 bills which were marked later when mrs williams went to the store to get the day's receipts palmer turned over only one of these marked bills the detectives then walked iu and arrested him when searched the other four marked bills were in his posses sion the police say they then questioned him but he re fused to talk yesterday mrs williams had palmer write a letter to a customer and used many words which were in the black hand letter this will be compared with the writing in the black hand letter school board head eack dp james b mcfntrich president of the i boaih of education has returned from an eitended trip in the west indies he was in his office yesterday and announced that tie was ready to take up liif official t - emmmm m he plays piano 30 hours south bethlehem pa march 20 all worlds records for long distance con tinuous piauo playing were shattered here to-day by lewis thorpe secretary of c m schwab's bethlehem steel companv i band who played rag-time and classical i selections for tbirtr hours an fifteen mini republican claflfl hiccoughs kill man of 86 st pall minn march 20.â€”william curric eighty-six 32 ash street minneapo lis died of exhaustion caused by hic coughs late to-day currie had been una l^fajj^^iccougblng for ten days to enable him to sleep his continued w m mrs schenk in collapse when held as slayer of husband wife who shot after j ' reveiry incoherently tells of the killing coroner's in quest calls her responsible finding of bullets and testi mony that two shots were fired show . discrepancies in story told by woman mrs theresa schenk who shot and killed her busliand charles schenk nwahlger os the northwestern gas light t coke cotii pany of park itidge early saturcl.i ,- idocb lug following a ui^ht of revelry in their home in that village was yesterday bound over to the grand jury as responsible for his death the verdict came after an sight hours session spent in examining witnesses it was nearly two horns later when the secret deliberations had beeu concluded the verdict came as the climax of a dag of startling clevelonui is a up to a certain point evgrthing hr^fl coroner's verdict in schenk case ( charles schenk now lying dead i > at his home in the said city of ) | park ridge county of cook state } i of Illinois came to his death from \ < shock and hemorrhage due to the ) ) result of a bullet wound of the j i abdomen from the evidence of \ < fered the jury we are of the ; j opinion that said bullet was fired i > from a revolver held in the hands \ i of the wife of the deceased the { ( jury therefore recommends that ) ' the said theresa schenk be held s Â£ to the grand jury until discharged s 5 by due process of law \ signed by > f r pfeifer albert x.buchheit > ) george n fulleredward b farnum > | fred c stagg a w cochran 5 s peter hoffman coroner \ examiner want ad columns untal somebody advertises for such article s s?3k *?* asthma and bronchial sufferers ***** r . i bronchial troche safe iml"zl^l^la v rxs you can get good bright round dollars out of the examiner want ad pages â€” in hundreds of ways from securing a bargain in real estate a business oppor tunity a good position or a good supply of help for the office or home read the examiner want ads and get the gold out of your newspaper Chicago examiner want ad pages read for profit â€” use for results fx r . j you can phono your ad to i ] the examiner â€” call main i-i 5000 and ask for an ad taker